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SEC Unveils Plan To Protect Markets Against Sudden Price Swings

Sec Markets

First Posted: 04/06/11 10:05 AM ET Updated: 06/06/11 06:12 AM ET

By Sarah N. Lynch

WASHINGTON - The Securities and Exchange Commission unveiled a long-awaited plan designed to protect the markets from volatile price swings following the May 6 "flash crash."

The so-called "limit up-limit down" proposal, announced by the SEC on Tuesday, would require trades in U.S.-listed stocks to be executed within a range tied to recent prices.

If approved, it would replace existing single-stock circuit breakers that were implemented through a pilot program shortly after the flash crash. The circuit breakers halt trading in hundreds of stocks and ETFs when their price moves 10 percent or more during a rolling five-minute period.

The SEC has been working closely with the exchanges and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority to come up with market structural fixes to prevent a repeat of the May 6 flash crash, which temporarily wiped out about $1 trillion in paper value in the stock market.

"Upgrading our trading parameters will help our markets retain the confidence of investors and companies," said SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro in a statement.

The proposed new limit up-limit down plan, which has been in the pipeline now for awhile, would prevent listed securities from being traded outside of a specific price band.

It is meant to serve as a more sophisticated mechanism for addressing market volatility. Although the circuit breakers have helped, they have also been triggered by erroneous trades.

Most recently, the potential holes in the circuit breaker program were exposed after 10 new exchange-traded funds suffered their own "mini" flash crash last Thursday. The new ETFs were not covered by the circuit breakers and some of them fell by as much as 98 percent.

Nasdaq OMX Group Inc was forced to cancel the trades, and the incident raised concerns that the measures taken by the SEC since the flash crash were not enough to prevent extreme market movements.

Tuesday's proposed price band for the limit up-limit down proposal would be set at a percentage above and below the average price of the security over the preceding five-minute period, the SEC said.

For stocks that are currently covered by the existing circuit breakers, the plan sets the percentage at 5 percent. Other stocks not covered by circuit breakers would be subject to a 10 percent threshold.

The SEC said these percentage bands would be doubled in the opening and closing periods of the market, and broader bands would apply to stocks if they are valued below a $1.00.

If a stock is unable to trade within the designated price band for more than 15 seconds, a five-minute trading pause would kick in.

Traders on Tuesday had a mixed reaction upon hearing about the SEC's plan.

Stephen Massocca, a managing director at Wedbush, said the percentage thresholds for the limit up-limit down plan strike him as " a bit narrow."

"You would need a wider band than that. Overall, I don't see anything dramatically different here," he said.

Others, however, said the plan will be a help.

"These rules, whether good or bad, will bring investors' confidence back to the market," said Larry Peruzzi, a senior equity trader at Cabrera Capital Markets.

The SEC said that the exchanges and FINRA are asking the agency to approve a one-year pilot program for the limit up-limit down plan. The public will get 21 days to comment on it.

Separately, the agency also is continuing to work with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the markets to recalibrate market-wide circuit breakers that apply across securities and futures.

(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch, Additional reporting by Angela Moon, Rodrigo Campos and Jonathan Spicer; editing by Bernard Orr; editing by Carol Bishopric)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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By Sarah N. Lynch WASHINGTON - The Securities and Exchange Commission unveiled a long-awaited plan designed to protect the markets from volatile price swings following the May 6 "flash crash." The...
By Sarah N. Lynch WASHINGTON - The Securities and Exchange Commission unveiled a long-awaited plan designed to protect the markets from volatile price swings following the May 6 "flash crash." The...
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WorldisMorphing
Jaded Iconoclast ...
11:44 PM on 04/06/2011
Thank god...that oughta give back legitimacy and relevance to the musical chair game...
Thank god vision and purpose prevailed...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
joe kim
07:37 PM on 04/06/2011
So if a stock has hit that lower limit and you still want to sell, you have to wait? That is a great idea.
No better way to create panic than not allowing people that want to sell..... sell.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
05:38 PM on 04/06/2011
The more You prop the faster it will fall !

DUH!!!
02:43 PM on 04/06/2011
"These rules, whether good or bad, will bring investors' confidence back to the market," said Larry Peruzzi, a senior equity trader at Cabrera Capital Markets.

What BS. What would bring investor confidence back to the market would be transparency and accountability. A few rules like this aren't going to move the chains of confidence when the primary broker-dealers that stand at the heart of this financial system are allowed to openly defraud their customers and counterparties. When they can short the products they are selling to customers, cook their books, conceal their money in dark pools and front-run trades with 'high frequency' connections - those are the sorts of things that decrease investor confidence.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LumberjackAR
Leaping from Tree to Tree!
02:05 PM on 04/06/2011
How about no more Oil speculation w/o mandated delivery? No delivery = no bids.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheAnarchist
Taxes Don't Pay For Anything
10:53 AM on 04/07/2011
F & F

The Gestapo Goons at Goldman Sachs will find you and rip out your fingers for typing such blasphemy. How dare you accuse oil/commodity speculation as the central inducement for price inflation in the American economy.

Here's an article that details just how G-S did it and got away with it. None of the SEC's rules can prevent this type of greed and market manipulation.

http://www.webofdebt.com/articles/egyptian_tinderbox.php
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cassie reinara
12:26 PM on 04/06/2011
Right. A day late and a dollar short. Go back to watching p0rn. I guess it what you do best. These guys are like the Keystone Cops and part of the problem is not just lack of their competence, but the obvious conflict of interests. A lot of the SEC guys/gals end up working up on Wall Street, so why are they going to be going after their potential future employers and shorten their possible well paying careers in the Den of Thieves?
11:48 AM on 04/06/2011
How will these proposed regulations mesh with the unwritten but firm federal government guaranty that no matter how reckless or corrupt it is, no financial institution worth more than $100 billion will be permitted to suffer a loss in the "free market?"
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
joe kim
07:39 PM on 04/06/2011
these markets haven't been "free" for 2 years now. We all know the fed gives banks billions daily to prop up the stock market.

Gold and silver > manipulated stocks
09:37 AM on 04/07/2011
"Free markets" are a myth and government subsidized markets as old as history.

For example, President Grant helped Jay Gould corner the gold market by agreeing not to sell U.S. government reserves. Not that long ago, the Hunt brothers foolishly tried to corner the silver market, but there was too much silver in the world.
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stox1994
11:31 AM on 04/06/2011
I would hope this also destroys the naked shorts.
09:25 AM on 04/06/2011
something must be done to clip the wings of speculators.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheAnarchist
Taxes Don't Pay For Anything
10:57 AM on 04/07/2011
Shut down Wall St. It works for me. Those greedy bas*(&) don't contribute anything to GDP but do create massive debt for the rest of us.

Shut it down.